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Jul 12, 2012
07/12
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WJZ
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yihia rahim is a syrian american pediatrician from panama city, florida. he volunteers at the refugee camps here and he told us that many children have been traumatized. >> where is my house. where is my room, where is my toys. where is my freedom where. is my backyard where is my garden. all of it gone. so they cannot understand it. >> reporter: but those who make it to turkey are the lucky ones. more than 1400 children have been killed inside syria. many more have been maimed. and a united nations report says boys as young as ten have been detained and tortured. in an apartment near the syrian border we met this grl. she told us that she is 12 years old but when we asked what had happened to her she couldn't speak. tears streamed from her eyes. her uncle told us her home was hit by a shell killing her pregnant mother and two siblings. tee was afraid to show his face. the children in syria suffer so much, he said. every day they are being killed or injured. dr. rahim said it was this stark reality that moved him to come to the camp. >> i feel i have to do
yihia rahim is a syrian american pediatrician from panama city, florida. he volunteers at the refugee camps here and he told us that many children have been traumatized. >> where is my house. where is my room, where is my toys. where is my freedom where. is my backyard where is my garden. all of it gone. so they cannot understand it. >> reporter: but those who make it to turkey are the lucky ones. more than 1400 children have been killed inside syria. many more have been maimed. and...
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Jul 13, 2012
07/12
by
KPIX
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eye 323
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this doctor is a syrian american pediatrician from panama city florida. he volunteers at the refugee camps here and told us that many children have been traumatized. >> " where's my house, where is my freedom? where's my backyard? where's my garden? all that is gone. they cannot understand that. >> those that make it to turkey are the lucky ones. more than 1400 children have been killed in side of syria. many more have been maimed. and a united nations report says that boys as young as 10 have been detained and tortured. in an apartment near the syrian border we met this girl. she told us that she is 12 years old, but when we asked what had happened to her, she could not speak. tears were streaming from her eyes. her uncle told us that her home was hit by a shell, killing her pregnant mother and two siblings. he too was afraid to show his face. >> the children and syria suffer so much, every day they're being killed or injured,. this doctor said it was the stark reality that moved him to come to the camps. >> might feel like i need to do my job >> do you
this doctor is a syrian american pediatrician from panama city florida. he volunteers at the refugee camps here and told us that many children have been traumatized. >> " where's my house, where is my freedom? where's my backyard? where's my garden? all that is gone. they cannot understand that. >> those that make it to turkey are the lucky ones. more than 1400 children have been killed in side of syria. many more have been maimed. and a united nations report says that boys as...
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Jul 17, 2012
07/12
by
WMPT
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the nasdaq rose 13 points to close at 2910. pulitzer-prize winning columnist william raspberry died today at his home in washington. he had prostate cancer. raspberry wrote for the "washington post" for nearly 40 years, and became one of the most widely read black journalists of his generation. in 1994, he became just the second black writer to win the pulitzer prize for commentary. william raspberry was 76 years old. those are some of the day's major stories. now, back to gwen. >> ifill: dry, hot weather is shriveling crops in the heart of america's farm belt, and squeezing food prices here and around the world. ray suarez has our story. >> they're not growing as quickly, they're getting burned >> suarez: that lament at a community kitchen in indianapolis is being heard amid the most extensive drowft in decades. according to the national climatic center more than 48 states seen here in yellow orange and maroon were in moderate to extreme drought in june. the rockies, central plains and ohio valley were hardest hit. from march
the nasdaq rose 13 points to close at 2910. pulitzer-prize winning columnist william raspberry died today at his home in washington. he had prostate cancer. raspberry wrote for the "washington post" for nearly 40 years, and became one of the most widely read black journalists of his generation. in 1994, he became just the second black writer to win the pulitzer prize for commentary. william raspberry was 76 years old. those are some of the day's major stories. now, back to gwen....
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Jul 26, 2012
07/12
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KPIX
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and my daughters middle name is rose and my sister and my grandmother are named rose. >> it was like meeting my sister after 22 years of my life. >> robert will fight saturday night and there will be a bone marrow drive. you can be screened and then you would go into the bone marrow registry, the screening process is just a cotton swab. >> it has changed so much, it is easy. >> someone from have around the world could be your match. >> it is very easy to do. what a great story. thank you. we're c,,,,,,,,,,,, >>> imagine having a celebration with this you outside and inside. now this is a great space to party. welcome to eye on the bay, i'm preview. we'd set of some tricks of the trade to show you how you can get the biggest bang for your buck.
and my daughters middle name is rose and my sister and my grandmother are named rose. >> it was like meeting my sister after 22 years of my life. >> robert will fight saturday night and there will be a bone marrow drive. you can be screened and then you would go into the bone marrow registry, the screening process is just a cotton swab. >> it has changed so much, it is easy. >> someone from have around the world could be your match. >> it is very easy to do. what a...
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Jul 19, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN
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it is interesting the point you make about the 22 hours after combat. some people say let's bring back the troopships. let's have them on with their buddies in war, for a week or two. that plane ride that can be disconcerting. your initial point is well taken. every deployment has potential stressors, through the burden of -- that people are carrying. indeed, the data shows the more time you are deployed, the more likely you are to have ptsd and/or tbi, and the more likely you are to commit suicide if you have either of those conditions. host: in fact, in the article, of those that have died by suicide, 38% had been deployed to iraq for afghanistan. mark thompson, deputy bureau chief
it is interesting the point you make about the 22 hours after combat. some people say let's bring back the troopships. let's have them on with their buddies in war, for a week or two. that plane ride that can be disconcerting. your initial point is well taken. every deployment has potential stressors, through the burden of -- that people are carrying. indeed, the data shows the more time you are deployed, the more likely you are to have ptsd and/or tbi, and the more likely you are to commit...
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Jul 18, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN
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because of the economic and financial circumstances of the state of california and class size went from 22, 23, to 33, 34. an extraordinary burden on the kids. and when you're in the second or third grade you never get a chance to go back and repeat. that's a lost year. that will carry through perhaps all the rest of your life and you missed that opportunity to realy advance your education. so just on the educational side you go, whoa, what if we had another 280,000 teachers in the classroom across america today? how would that advance the well being of our children? i think it's clear, they'd be far better off, far better off, but it didn't happen. mr. tonko: you're offering a powerful statement, a powerful challenge, the what if. but when you take that statement and failure to commit to our nation's children and then contrast that with what's happening in competitor nations, where they're investing in education, investing in higher education, investing in research, investing in advanced manufacturing, these are the challenges that are facing us as a government, as a body, as a house of r
because of the economic and financial circumstances of the state of california and class size went from 22, 23, to 33, 34. an extraordinary burden on the kids. and when you're in the second or third grade you never get a chance to go back and repeat. that's a lost year. that will carry through perhaps all the rest of your life and you missed that opportunity to realy advance your education. so just on the educational side you go, whoa, what if we had another 280,000 teachers in the classroom...